Ranking on Google with Search Engine Optimisation

Search Engine Optimisation is at the forefront of many businesses minds when they are aiming to promote and generate sales and conversions for their business and inevitably they approach search engine companies to instigate a plan for maximising or optimising their site and products to reach their desired market.

While companies that perform search engine optimisation would know the rules and guidelines for SEO by simply reading and following the official google SEO handbook, this simply covers the technical aspects of approaching website optimisation according to Googles (and most other Search Engines) requirements.

Adopting the correct mentality

Most people I speak to are under the impression that with search engine optimisation there is some secret technique or method by which you can guarantee reaching that number 1 position on the search results and the benefits of traffic associated with it and they view this aim with a very selfish attitude, an attitude of “I deserve to be there because I have a great product/service/idea so I should have no problems making it work for me”.  This is absolutely and completely the wrong mentality to adopt.

Google’s perspective – its a business

Here are the facts.

Yes its true, Google is a business and a damn successful one. The majority of us however forget this and see it as something that’s free, and here to cater to our needs (search), and herein lies my point. Googles business is essentially as a service provider and its main focus is to provide results to searches, but not just any old result plucked out of thin air. Imagine you performed a search and the results did not satisfy.  Would you stick around and continue to use that service?

No, you wouldn’t, you would change and use a service that provides RESULTS that are relevant to you and the search you are performing. Google realise this, but businesses tend to forget this when they approach the market via search engine optimisation. Remember Google owes you nothing. It owes its users something very specific however and that is quality results.

Mental Shift towards Quality Content

Its time for businesses to make a mental shift when its comes to SEO.  Google will list you, and rank you for any given keyword or phrase at different levels but its all based around one thing.  Quality. There is absolutely no point in a business (or  individual) posting content and trying desperately to rank it when it simply cannot compete with other content of a higher quality.

What is quality content then?

This is the ultimate question.  Who or how is it  decided what is quality content and what makes information more valuable or of a higher quality than another? For me it is dictated by a specific set of factors but in reality it could be range of different aspects that are decided by YOU not by Google. Quality content cannot really be defined unless you are aware of who you are and what people want and the relationship between these two variables. I believe that Google are continually adapting to meet this need. The algorithm created by Google, at this time, relies heavily on backlinks to decide where and what quality content is.

Google looks at the amount of backlinks that a set of information has as a vote of confidence, a thumbs up or a recommendation from readers and visitors and ranks that information accordingly. They hate it when people pay for these recommendations and that means allowing money to influence decision makers and provide backlinks for financial gain as their point of view is that the backlink should be freely given due to the quality of the content or the level of satisfaction the viewer has gained from reading or watching the information provided.

Of course, people do pay for links and sites charge for giving them. My advice?  Dont, its simply not worth getting penalised or removed completely from the rankings for the “quick” method of generating backlinks with money.  You and your visitors are much better served by spending that same money, time, effort or expertise by creating strong content people will enjoy.

So what is the point of Search Engine optimisation then?

This doesn’t mean that search engine optimisation (SEO) is not without merit, its a matter of deciding the context and merit of focusing your efforts and achieving goals. SEO is continually taken out of context, at least in my experience, and people are continually under the expectation that by performing it then they are guaranteeing results.  Any SEO preformed is only as good as the website it is performed upon so what makes people think that slapping together a basic site with little valuable assets and then performing SEO will get them anywhere.  I’m afraid it simply doesn’t work like this.

Dont try and outsmart Google, work with it.

The whole point of SEO is to make your website match the criteria set out by Google and ensure your site is meeting these requirements to the maximum effect, that’s what optimisation means.  Basically you want to follow the rules as closely as possible so when you publish information Google is happy to list and rank it.  But that’s the first step in getting rankings, it wont necessarily produce these backlinks you need to help increase the importance of the information itself.  That can only be given by the people who want to read it and give value to it freely, and you cannot always influence that decision, unless your content is top quality. (Again that word quality).

The point is, don’t try and make Google make you number 1,  make Google want you to be number 1.

The more useful, helpful or quality your content is to your target audience the more it will rank, its really that simple and churning out repetative, meaningless information will not endear you to search egnines or users alike.  It is pretty obvious you cant beat it with under hand tricks or ways and means of rewriting the same old stuff again and again.  No one will want to read it, and why would they. Get creative, get relevent, get real.

Corporate Google and the Google of yesterday

Google is a corporate monster.

Whether its a nice and cuddly monster or a salivating grotesque entity that gives you nightmares all depends on your point of view really, but lets face it, its not the entity it started out as many years ago. In my time on line Google has been both a nightmare inducing beast as it has become more corporate in its structure and also in a complete reversal it is one of my favourite and most visited sites (if not the most visited site on line).

How have they managed to achieve this?

We are all a little familiar with the story of Google having started in a dorm in Stanford University, their overview and history is readily supplied on the Google Corporate Overview page so lets break it down.

Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.

Point of fact, we tend to forget this when involved in marketing, indeed it is only in recent years that we have accepted it as a community and also as a result of Google having edited their search algorithm continually and never really telling anyone how it works. Its a simple truth that to work with them on this is not only beneficial to them as a service provider but also us, as users, developers, designers and marketers in both the long term and short. If it isnt good enough, interesting enough, or valuable enough then quite frankly it wont rank.

Or does it?

As a first step to fulfilling that mission, Google’s founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin developed a new approach to online search that took root in a Stanford University dorm room and quickly spread to information seekers around the globe. Google is now widely recognized as the world’s largest search engine — an easy-to-use free service that usually returns relevant results in a fraction of a second.

Right, that last bold line has various connotations. Firstly, Google isnt perfect, lets be clear on that, they know it but we tend to forget. Secondly, its easy to use yes, but low and behold, usually returns relevant results. Again, this tells us that google changes.  If they are not producing relevant results they will try to address it to create relevant results in order to satisfy the searchers needs.

When you visit www.google.com or one of the dozens of other Google domains, you’ll be able to find information in many different languages; check stock quotes, maps, and news headlines; lookup phonebook listings for every city in the United States; search billions of images and peruse the world’s largest archive of Usenet messages — more than 1 billion posts dating back to 1981.

Here is the reflection of the size of corporate Google today. Over 1 billion posts since 1981 (posts are being refered to as pages I would assume). Also bear in mind this was taken from the Google.com page and not the localised version for .co.uk or .es etc.

It was over this period that Google became a monster for me. I was continually working with clients who wanted to rank well but Googles tune changed so quickly and so erratically that it became more and more nightmarish to work with, to the point that it felt like you where not working with Google but against them.

We also provide ways to access all this information without making a special trip to the Google homepage. The Google Toolbar enables you to conduct a Google search from anywhere on the web. And for those times when you’re away from your PC altogether, Google can be used from a number of wireless platforms including WAP and i-mode phones.

Google’s utility and ease of use have made it one of the world’s best known brands almost entirely through word of mouth from satisfied users. As a business, Google generates revenue by providing advertisers with the opportunity to deliver measurable, cost-effective online advertising that is relevant to the information displayed on any given page.

This makes the advertising useful to you as well as to the advertiser placing it. We believe you should know when someone has paid to put a message in front of you, so we always distinguish ads from the search results or other content on a page. We don’t sell placement in the search results themselves, or allow people to pay for a higher ranking there.

And here we have the reason why I feel in love with Google and search again. It wasn’t actually Goole who fixed the problem, at least not directly. It was the development of the technology, the refinement of the rules and a settling down of the requirements that allowed honest web development to become a feasible option again. For the sake of a better term it was the creation of Web 2.0 and Social Media that made this user resurgence possible and now, it feels like we are somewhat in control.

The secondary aspect that created a corporate google was also the advertising medium and the refinements that have and are taking place with the placement of these adverts.  While quite unobtrusive in general, except on sites which surronded text with adverts of course, I have seen a noticeable difference in the quality and relevance of adverts served to me quite recently, for a change, not actually a bad thing.

So things are changing, Google is changing, people are changing and every single thing associated with search and websites is in a continuous state of flux. The pending emergence of web 3.0, the surge in users for twitter and quite possible a range of developments in the future will only serve to become either a part of the Google corporation or its competition.

Which would you prefer to see?

Google SearchWiki – personalise your own search results

An all new feature of the Google Search Results for those users logged into their Google Gmail account. This feature allows you to dictate internally within your account how the results for particular key phrases are displayed. In other words you can effectively create your own personalised “top 10″ search results for keywords and phrases you search for regularly.

This wont affect rankings (yet) but I can see it having an effect once this gains momentum and popularity with users and may act as some kind of “vote” helping websites rank higher when more users have them personalised at the number one position within their own accounts, however I´m simply speculating about this at the moment!

For more detailed information about this check out the Official Google Blog here:

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/searchwiki-make-search-your-own.html